Bagi yang lupa: Ali Abunimah ini menginginkan "One state solution"

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/One-state_solution


Toward Palestine's 'Mubarak moment'

The Palestinian Authority should dissolve itself, as it is acting in Israel's 
interest, writer says.

Ali Abunimah Last Modified: 24 Feb 2011 16:25 GMT

New elections will not give Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas the credibility 
he needs, writer says [Reuters]

The slow collapse of Palestinian collective leadership institutions in recent 
years has reached a crisis amid the ongoing Arab revolutions, the revelations 
in the Palestine Papers, and the absence of any credible peace process.
 
The Ramallah-based Palestinian Authority (PA) controlled by Mahmoud Abbas and 
his Fatah faction has attempted to respond to this crisis by calling elections 
for the Palestinian Legislative Council (PLC) and the PA presidency.

Abbas hopes that elections could restore legitimacy to his leadership. Hamas 
has rejected such elections in the absence of a reconciliation agreement ending 
the division that resulted from Fatah's refusal (along with Israel and the PA's 
western sponsors, especially the United States) to accept the result of the 
last election in 2006, which Hamas decisively won.
 
But even if such an election were held in the West Bank and Gaza Strip, it does 
not resolve the crisis of collective leadership faced by the entire Palestinian 
people, some ten million distributed between those living in the occupied Gaza 
Strip and West Bank, inside Israel, and the worldwide diaspora.

A house divided
 
There are numerous reasons to oppose new PA elections, even if Hamas and Fatah 
were to sort out their differences. The experience since 2006 demonstrates that 
democracy, governance and normal politics are impossible under Israel's brutal 
military occupation.

The Palestinian body politic was divided not into two broad political streams 
offering competing visions, as in other electoral democracies, but one stream 
that is aligned with, supported by and dependent on the occupation and its 
foreign sponsors, and another that remains committed, at least nominally, to 
resistance. These are contradictions that cannot be resolved through elections.

The Ramallah PA under Abbas today functions as an arm of the Israeli 
occupation, while Hamas, its cadres jailed, tortured and repressed in the West 
Bank by Israel and Abbas' forces, is besieged in Gaza where it tries to govern. 
Meanwhile, Hamas has offered no coherent political vision to get Palestinians 
out of their impasse and its rule in Gaza has increasingly begun to resemble 
that of its Fatah counterparts in the West Bank.
 
The PA was created by agreement between the Palestine Liberation Organization 
(PLO) and Israel under the Oslo Accords. The September 13, 1993 "Declaration of 
Principles" signed by the parties states that:

"The aim of the Israeli-Palestinian negotiations within the current Middle East 
peace process is, among other things, to establish a Palestinian Interim 
Self-Government Authority, the elected Council (the "Council"), for the 
Palestinian people in the West Bank and the Gaza Strip, for a transitional 
period not exceeding five years, leading to a permanent settlement based on 
Security Council Resolutions 242 and 338."
 
Under the agreement, PA elections would "constitute a significant interim 
preparatory step toward the realization of the legitimate rights of the 
Palestinian people and their just requirements".

Small mandate
 
Thus, the PA was only ever intended to be temporary, transitional, and its 
mandate limited to a mere fraction of the Palestinian people, those in the West 
Bank and Gaza Strip. The Oslo Accords specifically limited the PA's powers to 
functions delegated to it by Israel under the agreement.
 
Therefore, elections for the PLC will not resolve the issue of representation, 
for the Palestinian people as a whole. Most would not have a vote. As in 
previous elections, Israel would likely intervene, particularly in East 
Jerusalem to attempt to prevent even some Palestinians under occupation from 
voting.

Given all these conditions, a newly elected PLC would only serve to further 
entrench divisions among Palestinians while also creating the illusion that 
Palestinian self-governance exists -- and can thrive -- under Israeli 
occupation.
 
A decade and a half after its creation, the Palestinian Authority has proved 
not to be a step toward the "legitimate rights of the Palestinian people," but 
rather a significant obstacle in the way of achieving them.

The PA offers no genuine self-government or protection for Palestinians under 
occupation, who continue to be victimized, killed, maimed and besieged by 
Israel with impunity while Israel confiscates and colonizes their land.
 
The PA never was and cannot be a stand-in for real collective leadership for 
the Palestinian people as a whole, and PA elections are not a substitute for 
self-determination.

Dissolving the PA

With the complete collapse of the "peace process" -- the final push given by 
the Palestine Papers -- it is time for the PA to have its Mubarak moment. When 
the Egyptian tyrant finally left office on February 11, he handed power over to 
the armed forces.

The PA should dissolve itself in a similar manner by announcing that the 
responsibilities delegated to it by Israel are being handed back to the 
occupying power, which must fulfill its duties under the Fourth Geneva 
Convention of 1949.
 
This would not be a surrender. Rather, it would be a recognition of reality and 
an act of resistance on the part of Palestinians who would collectively refuse 
to continue to assist the occupier in occupying them. By removing the fig leaf 
of "self-governance" masking and protecting from scrutiny Israel's colonial and 
military tyranny, the end of the PA would expose Israeli apartheid for all the 
world to see.
 
The same message would also go to the European Union and the United States who 
have been directly subsidizing Israel's occupation and colonization through the 
ruse of "aid" to the Palestinians and training for security forces that act as 
Israeli proxies. If the European Union wishes to continue funding Israel's 
occupation, it ought to have the integrity to do it openly and not use 
Palestinians or the peace process as a front.
 
Dissolving the PA may cause some hardship and uncertainty for the tens of 
thousands of Palestinians and their dependents, who rely on salaries paid by 
the European Union via the PA. But the Palestinian people as a whole -- the 
millions who have been victimised and marginalised by Oslo -- would stand to 
benefit much more.
 
Handing the PA's delegated powers back to the occupier would free Palestinians 
to focus on reconstituting their collective body politic and implementing 
strategies to really liberate themselves from Israeli colonial rule.

New leadership
 
What can a real collective Palestinian leadership look like? Undoubtedly this 
is a tough challenge. Many older Palestinians recall fondly the heyday of the 
PLO. The PLO still exists, of course, but its organs have long since lost any 
legitimacy or representative function. They are now mere rubber stamps in the 
hands of Abbas and his narrow circle.
 
Could the PLO be reconstituted as a truly representative body by, say, electing 
a new Palestine National Council (PNC) -- the PLO's "parliament in exile"? 
Although the PNC was supposed to be elected by the Palestinian people, in 
reality that has never happened -- in part due to the practical difficulty of 
actually holding elections across the Palestinian diaspora. Members were always 
appointed through negotiations among the various political factions and the PNC 
included seats for independents and representatives from student, women's and 
other organizations affiliated with the PLO.
 
One of the key points of disagreement between Fatah and Hamas has been reform 
of the PLO in which Hamas would become a member and receive a proportional 
number of seats on the organization's various governing bodies. But even if 
this happened, it would not be the same as having Palestinians choose their 
representatives directly.
 
Yet if Arab countries which host large Palestinian refugee populations undergo 
democratic transformations, new possibilities for Palestinian politics will 
open up.

In recent years, "out of country voting" facilities were provided for large 
Iraqi and Afghan refugee and exile populations for elections sponsored by the 
powers occupying those countries. In theory, it would be possible to hold 
elections for all Palestinians, perhaps under UN auspices -- including the huge 
Palestinian diaspora in the Americas and Europe.
 
The trouble is that any such elections would probably need to rely on the 
goodwill and cooperation of an "international community" (the US and its 
allies), which has been implacably opposed to allowing Palestinians to choose 
their own leaders.

Would the energy and expense of running a transnational Palestinian bureaucracy 
be worth it? Would these new bodies be vulnerable to the sorts of subversion, 
cooptation, and corruption that turned the original PLO from a national 
liberation movement into its current sad status where it has been hijacked by a 
collaborationist clique?
 
I do not have definitive answers to these questions, but they strike me as the 
ones Palestinians ought now to be debating.

Inspirational boycott
 
In light of the Arab revolutions that were leaderless, another intriguing 
possibility is that at this stage Palestinians should not worry about creating 
representative bodies.

Instead, they should focus on powerful, decentralized resistance, particularly 
boycott, divestment and sanctions (BDS) internationally, and the popular 
struggle within historic Palestine.
 
The BDS movement does have a collective leadership in the form of the Boycott 
National Committee (BNC). However, this is not a leadership that issues orders 
and instructions Palestinians or solidarity organisations around the world. 
Rather, it sets an agenda reflecting a broad Palestinian consensus, and 
campaigns for others to work according to this agenda, largely through moral 
suasion.
 
The agenda encompasses the needs and rights of all Palestinians: ending the 
occupation and colonisation of all Arab territories occupied in 1967; ending 
all forms of discrimination against Palestinian citizens in Israel; and 
respecting, promoting and implementing the rights of Palestinian refugees.
 
The BDS campaign is powerful and growing because it is decentralized and those 
around the world working for the boycott of Israel -- following the precedent 
of apartheid South Africa -- are doing so independently. There is no central 
body for Israel and its allies to sabotage and attack.
 
This might be the model to follow: let us continue to build up our strength 
through campaigning, civil resistance and activism. Two months ago, few could 
have imagined that the decades old regimes of Tunisia's Zine el Abidine Ben Ali 
and Egypt's Hosni Mubarak would fall -- but fall they did under the weight of 
massive, broad-based popular protests. Indeed, such movements hold much greater 
promise to end Israel's apartheid regime and produce a genuine, representative 
and democratic Palestinian leadership than the kinds of cumbersome institutions 
created by the Oslo Accords. The end of the peace process is only the beginning.

Ali Abunimah is co-founder of The Electronic Intifada, a policy advisor with 
the Palestinian Policy Network, and author of One Country: A Bold Proposal to 
End the Israeli-Palestinian Impasse.

The views expressed in this article are the author's own and do not necessarily 
reflect Al Jazeera's editorial



------------------------------------

Post message: prole...@egroups.com
Subscribe   :  proletar-subscr...@egroups.com
Unsubscribe :  proletar-unsubscr...@egroups.com
List owner  :  proletar-ow...@egroups.com
Homepage    :  http://proletar.8m.com/Yahoo! Groups Links

<*> To visit your group on the web, go to:
    http://groups.yahoo.com/group/proletar/

<*> Your email settings:
    Individual Email | Traditional

<*> To change settings online go to:
    http://groups.yahoo.com/group/proletar/join
    (Yahoo! ID required)

<*> To change settings via email:
    proletar-dig...@yahoogroups.com 
    proletar-fullfeatu...@yahoogroups.com

<*> To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to:
    proletar-unsubscr...@yahoogroups.com

<*> Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to:
    http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/

Kirim email ke